Tag: South Korea

How an Anal Acupuncturist Became a Leading Topic in a ROK Presidential Debate

You know you don’t have much to debate when you have to play the anal acupuncturist card:

This photo, provided by Yoo Seong-min’s campaign, shows an alleged anal acupuncture specialist (in circle) appearing close to People Power Party presidential contender Yoon Seok-youl (2nd from R) at an event in June 2021. (Yonhap)

 Yoon Seok-youl, the leading opposition presidential candidate, has increasingly faced questions about superstitious or unscientific beliefs, this time over his alleged ties to an anal acupuncture specialist that he claims to have no knowledge of.

The allegation surfaced Tuesday during the sixth TV debate among presidential contenders of the main opposition People Power Party, when one of Yoon’s competitors, former Rep. Yoo Seong-min, asked him if he has met someone “known to perform acupuncture on a strange and particular area.” 

Yoon replied he had not. (…….)

Yoo’s campaign reprised the attack on Wednesday, issuing a statement asking “what is Yoon trying to hide by lying” about his relationship with the man.

Yoon’s campaign fired back: “Not only did (Yoo) turn the TV debate into a quiz show on psychics, he is now spreading lies. This attempt to damage Yoon is nothing short of shameful.”

On the video, a spokesperson for Yoon said the man had tried to approach the candidate at the event but was restrained by Yoon’s aides.

Moreover, the man in question was a regular feature not only at political events attended by Yoo, the former lawmaker, but also other political heavyweights such as the ruling Democratic Party’s presidential contender, Lee Nak-yon, minor People’s Party leader Ahn Cheol-soo and former U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon, according to Yoon’s campaign.

Yonhap

You can read more at the link.

Ruling Party Presidential Hopeful Faces Allegations of Corruption from Daejang-dong Development Scandal

The ruling party has been attacking the opposition party’s presidential hopeful with corruption allegations so now they are fighting back with corruption allegations themselves against the ruling party’s candidate:

This photo provided by the National Assembly press corps shows Rep. Kim Gi-hyeon (C), floor leader of the People Power Party, speaking to a party meeting on Oct. 5, 2021. (Yonhap)

Clashes between rival political parties intensified Tuesday in connection with a sprawling regional development corruption scandal, causing disruptions of a series of parliamentary audit sessions of the government amid opposition calls for an independent counsel investigation.

At the start of at least three audit sessions, lawmakers of the main opposition People Power Party (PPP) hung banners on their desks calling for a special prosecutor probe and other slogans attacking the ruling Democratic Party and its presidential hopeful Gyeonggi Province Gov. Lee Jae-myung. 

In response, DP lawmakers boycotted the sessions, accusing the PPP of trying to take political advantage of the audit. Some DP members even put up their own banners claiming that the opposition party is to blame for the scandal.

The scandal escalated over the weekend with the arrest of Yoo Dong-gyu, widely considered a close aide to Gov. Lee, on charges that he played key roles in helping a private asset management firm collect astronomical profits from a land development project in Seongnam, south of Seoul.

Lee was mayor of Seongnam at the time.

Yonhap

You can read more at the link, but if Gov. Lee Jae-myung is found to be some how involved in this scandal this is far more serious than the allegations being thrown at his rival former Prosecutor General, Yoon Seok-youl.

Nearly 90% of Korean Adults Have Received Their First COVID Shot

It took a while to get going, but once the infrastructure was in place South Korea has made quick gains getting their population the COVID vaccine:

People wait for COVID-19 jabs at a vaccination center in western Seoul on Oct. 5, 2021. (Yonhap)

Nine out of 10 South Korean adults have received at least one shot of COVID-19 vaccine, helping the country to get closer to a goal of creating herd immunity, the health authority said Tuesday.

A total of 39.7 million people have received their first dose of COVID-19 vaccine, accounting for 77.4 percent of the country’s 51.3 million population or 90 percent of those aged over 18, according to the Korea Disease Control and Prevention Agency (KDCA). 

The number of fully vaccinated people stood at 27.2 million, or 53 percent of the total or 61.6 percent of the adult population, the KDCA said. 

Health authorities expressed optimism that the country will be able to fully inoculate over 70 percent of the population by the end of October thanks to people’s willingness to get vaccinations and smooth vaccine supplies

Yonhap

You can read more at the link.

North Korea Restores Cross Border Communications Line

The Kim regime continues their strategy of wooing the Moon administration to pressure the Biden administration into a deal:

This file photo, provided by the unification ministry, shows a South Korean liaison officer talking to his North Korean counterpart at the Seoul bureau of their joint liaison office on Oct. 4, 2021. After a two-month suspension, the two Koreas restored cross-border communication lines that Pyongyang suspended in protest of an annual combined military exercise of South Korea and the United States. 

 South and North Korea restored their direct communication lines Monday, raising hopes for the resumption of stalled inter-Korean dialogue amid a drawn-out deadlock in denuclearization talks.

The two sides had contact through a military hotline and a separate joint liaison office channel, according to South Korean officials.

Hours earlier, North Korea’s state media announced that the lines would be back to normal operation as of 9 a.m. on the day.

Last year, North Korea blew up a liaison office in its border town of Kaesong and unilaterally cut off all inter-Korean communication lines in anger over anti-Pyongyang leaflets sent from South Korea.

The hotlines were briefly back in operation in late July before being suspended by North Korea in protest of an annual combined military exercise of South Korea and the United States. The North has long denounced the allies’ annual military exercise as a rehearsal for invasion.

Yonhap

You can read more at the link.

Self Employed Feel Like They are In Their Own “Squid Game” in South Korea

One of the things I love about South Korea is the high number of self-employed mom & pop stores that are few and far between in America now. The COVID protocols are really crushing these businesses now:

In the hit Netflix series, “Squid Game,” the main character, Seong Gi-hun, joins the fight-to-the-death challenge, driven by the 400 million won he owes, after the failure of his restaurants, a business he started after losing his job at a car manufacturing company. Hit by the COVID-19 pandemic and changes in the economy, many small business owners say they are no different from Seong. 

In an internet forum on the country’s top search engine and platform, Naver, where the self-employed share information, a man who runs a small sushi restaurant said he could not take his eyes off the show. “The show depicts in detail what it is like to be on the edge of a precipice,” he wrote. Another said he felt like he was living right in the middle of the game. The only difference is that “there will be no prize money even if I win,” he commented.

According to the National Self-Employed Emergency Response Committee, at least 22 small business owners have taken their own lives since the coronavirus pandemic began. One of them retrieved the deposit for her one-room studio apartment so as to pay her part-time workers before committing suicide. For many, even if the business is continuously incurring losses, immediately shutting down is not an option because they cannot terminate their rental contract without losing additional deposit money.

Korea Times

You can read more at the link.

Tweet of the Day: Main U.S. Interests in Korea

https://twitter.com/freekorea_us/status/1442122083035754496

Chinese Foreign Minister Warns South Korea About Cold War Thinking If They Join Five Eyes Intelligence Pact

It appears the Chinese Foreign Minister has made it clear to South Korea to not join the U.S. led Five Eyes intelligence sharing agreement:

South Korean Foreign Minister Chung Eui-yong, right, and his Chinese counterpart, Wang Yi, pose for a photo ahead of bilateral talks at the Foreign Ministry in central Seoul on Wednesday. [NEWS1]
South Korean Foreign Minister Chung Eui-yong, right, and his Chinese counterpart, Wang Yi, pose for a photo ahead of bilateral talks at the Foreign Ministry in central Seoul on Wednesday. [NEWS1]

Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi dismissed the U.S.-led Five Eyes intelligence-sharing alliance as an “outdated” byproduct of the Cold War era, speaking to reporters in Seoul after talks with his South Korean counterpart Wednesday.  
   
Wang, also a Chinese state councilor, held bilateral talks Wednesday with Korean Foreign Minister Chung Eui-yong to discuss the situation on the Korean Peninsula and other bilateral, regional and global issues, and later paid a courtesy call on President Moon Jae-in.  
   
His two-day visit comes amid intensifying Sino-U.S. rivalry and concerns over North Korea’s latest missile provocations as Seoul has been trying to bring Pyongyang back to the dialogue table.  
   
Addressing speculation that South Korea may be asked to join the Five Eyes mechanism involving the United States, Britain, Canada, Australia and New Zealand, Wang told reporters, “I think that is completely a byproduct of the Cold War era. It is already outdated.”  
   
The Five Eyes program dates back to U.S. and British intelligence cooperation during World War II and evolved during the Cold War era as a mechanism for monitoring the Soviet Union. A recent U.S. House bill seeks to expand the U.S.-led intelligence-sharing program to include South Korea, Japan, India and Germany. An expansion of the exclusive Five Eyes network could be reflective of U.S. efforts to unite its allies to counter China’s growing dominance in the Indo-Pacific region. 

Joong Ang Ilbo

You can read more at the link.

A Third of Korean Teleworkers Claim They Suffer from Work-From-Home Syndrome

If these teleworkers have work from home syndrome than the entire U.S. military needs to get diagnosed with this disorder because even when you are off duty you are still on duty. Maybe servicemembers can get an extra VA rating for this 😉 :

Three out of every 10 employees who telecommute are experiencing “work-from-home (WFH) syndrome” as the pandemic rolls on and the boundary between work and life blurs. 

According to a survey of 910 remote workers conducted by recruiting platform Job Korea from Sept. 3 to 10, 32.1 percent of the respondents said they have experienced the WFH syndrome, experienced as physical and emotional stress.

Where multiple answers were allowed, 54.8 percent said they experienced the feeling that they were still working even after work hours, similar to 46.2 percent who answered they felt a nervous and stressed all day. 

“In a from-home working environment, the physical distinction between work and home life is pretty vague. I think that’s why I can’t get my mind off of work even when my computer is turned off and feel like I’m working all day,” said a 28-year-old employee in Seoul who asked to be identified only by her surname Kim. 

Korea Times

You can read more at the link.

Did North Korea Launch Ballistic Missiles in Response to ROK SLBM Test?

The fish in the waters around Korea were under extra attack yesterday from both North and South Korean missile launches:

Wednesday's successful test of a submarine-launched ballistic missile (SLBM) from the Navy submarine Dosan Ahn Chang-ho makes South Korea the eighth country in the world to possess the weapon. [DEFENSE MINISTRY]
Wednesday’s successful test of a submarine-launched ballistic missile (SLBM) from the Navy submarine Dosan Ahn Chang-ho makes South Korea the eighth country in the world to possess the weapon. [DEFENSE MINISTRY]

The Korean Peninsula was the site of dueling launches on Wednesday as North Korea fired two tactical ballistic missiles around mid-day, followed by South Korea testing a new submarine-launched ballistic missile (SLBM) later in the afternoon.  
   
The North fired first on Wednesday, sending two ballistic missiles into the waters east of the Korean Peninsula around 12:38 p.m. and 12:43 p.m., according to the South’s Joint Chiefs of Staff (JCS).  
   
The JCS said the missiles flew a distance of approximately 800 kilometers (500 miles) while reaching an altitude of 60 kilometers (37 miles).  
   
Less than three hours later, in the afternoon, South Korea followed with a scheduled submarine-launched ballistic missile (SLBM) test, according to the Defense Ministry.  
   
In addition to the SLBM, the South tested two different types of missiles on Wednesday: a long-range air-to-surface missile and a supersonic anti-ship missile, according to military authorities. 

Joong Ang Ilbo

You can read more at the link, but I think it is likely the North Koreans are just making a statement that if the ROK’s are allowed to fire ballistic missiles then we are going to as well. Additionally the Kim regime is probably trying to take away headlines from the ROK for successfully testing their SLBM which is a feat the North Koreans have not been able to master yet.

Korean Government Fines Google $176 Million for Anti-Competitive Behavior

This CNBC article says Google makes $426k a minute. So it will take Google about 7 hours today to make enough money to pay this fine:

 South Korea’s antitrust regulator said Tuesday it has decided to fine global tech giant Google 207.4 billion won (US$176.8 million) for pressing smartphone makers into only using its Android mobile operating system.

Since 2016, the Korea Fair Trade Commission (KFTC) has been looking into Google over allegations it obstructed local smartphone makers, such as Samsung Electronics Co. and LG Electronics Inc., from using operating systems developed by rivals.

Google has hampered market competition by requiring smartphone makers to clinch an “anti-fragmentation agreement (AFA)” when they sign key contracts with Google over app store licenses and early access to OS, according to the regulator.

Yonhap

You can read more at the link.